We may have been overly optimistic. As it turns out both historic ships have had their share of real estate issues. The ferry Yankee was recently evicted from a berth in Hoboken and the tanker Mary A. Whalen has been looking for a suitable home for some time now. Fortunately for both ships, and for ship lovers in New York and environs, it looks just possible that both vessels may find a home on the other side of the harbor from Hoboken in Red Hook, Brooklyn.

The 106-year-old 150-foot-long steel ferry, Yankee, was docked in Hoboken for more than seven years. For the first six, it was alongside a private pier in the Shipyard Marina, but after Superstorm Sandy, the ferry relocated two piers south to city-owned Pier 12 on a temporary emergency basis. In April, the Yankee was given an eviction notice, and despite efforts to reach an agreement with the city, was towed out of Hoboken on July 2.

The ferry Yankee has a long and illustrious history. Built with a steel hull and three decks in 1906 in Philadelphia, the vessel has served as a passenger ferry, a troop transport in both world wars, and is the last surviving Ellis Island ferry. The Yankee was registered as an historic vessel with the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.

Will Red Hook Become New York Harbor’s Home for Historic Ships?

As we have posted previously, the tanker Mary A. Whalen, has been looking for a suitable home for some time now. (See our post – No City for Old Tankers.) The historic tanker is currently inaccessible to the public in a berth at the Red Hook Container terminal. If all goes well, the Mary A. Whalen may become a neighbor of the ferry Yankee. Quadrozzi is also in talks with PortSide NewYork, the owner of the Mary A. Whalen, to have that boat moved permanently at the Gowanus Bay Terminal Columbia Street pier. If negotiations go well, Red Hook may yet be be a home for New York’s historic ships. Two historic ships is not a fleet but it is a good start.